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There’s a theory that says we are (or the universe is) a white hole. A white hole is the opposite of a black hole. If we are, then the multiverse theory would have to be correct, and we are nothing more than another universes waste.
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There’s a theory that says we are (or the universe is) a white hole. A white hole is the opposite of a black hole. If we are, then the multiverse theory would have to be correct, and we are nothing more than another universes waste.

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You are the universe

'The entire universe'

You aren’t in the universe, you aren’t on the universe, you are the universe. The universe is conscious of itself. It can see, smell, taste, hear, touch, feel and process itself. Isn’t that deeply profound?

This is another image taken by hubble space telescope, in 1995. It is ‘the pillars of creation’, located in the eagle nebula. What this is, is left over gas from the big bang. After the big bang, there was only hydrogen, helium and dark matter. Over time, the gas started swirling around, heating up, and then forming stars. Within stars, other elements were created. As supernovas (a supernova is the death of a star) happened, hydrogen, helium, rock and everything else created within the stars were shot across the universe during the explosion. Over time, rock clumped together, and planets were formed. Basically, everything ‘natural’ and ‘pure’ in the universe is the descendant of a star. Even you.
The nebula that it’s part of has given birth to new stars over millions of years, some of them gargantuan sized, dwarfing our sun. Stars are still being created within this, and therefore everything else. This, in some form, is godlike.

This is another image taken by hubble space telescope, in 1995. It is ‘the pillars of creation’, located in the eagle nebula. What this is, is left over gas from the big bang. After the big bang, there was only hydrogen, helium and dark matter. Over time, the gas started swirling around, heating up, and then forming stars. Within stars, other elements were created. As supernovas (a supernova is the death of a star) happened, hydrogen, helium, rock and everything else created within the stars were shot across the universe during the explosion. Over time, rock clumped together, and planets were formed. Basically, everything ‘natural’ and ‘pure’ in the universe is the descendant of a star. Even you.

The nebula that it’s part of has given birth to new stars over millions of years, some of them gargantuan sized, dwarfing our sun. Stars are still being created within this, and therefore everything else. This, in some form, is godlike.

Perspective

This is earth from a distance. 3.7 billion miles away to be exact. It looks almost as  a spec of dust does, in a dark room, with a torch (or flash-light) shining. If this is from only 3.7 billion miles away, what size is it really, in comparison to the rest of the universe? If earth is that size, we as physical beings are inexplicably smaller, and our consciousnesses are probably even more tiny. You’d laugh if I told you bacteria understood the workings of the human body on a complex level, so how could you possibly believe we understand the universe on any more than a basic level?

This is a picture taken by the hubble space telescope in 2003. It is a small, seemingly empty patch of sky. Meaning before this image was taken with the telescope, the patch of sky captured looked completely empty. Every single piece of light you see in this image, no matter how big or diminutively small is an entire galaxy. Every single dot or little spot you see is an entire galaxy. Everything illuminated, every dot and spot has millions of stars, every star might have planets orbiting it. If this is all in one ‘empty’ patch of sky, what are the chances of us being alone?